There was some good news for Trump though—many of his campaign’s points of attack against Harris and the Biden administration appeared to connect with voters, with 47 percent saying he prioritizes a good climate for business (compared to 37 percent for Harris) and 43 percent saying he would prioritize lowering the cost of household goods (compared to only 36 percent for the Democratic nominee).

Harris needs to speak at a fourth grade level without sounding condescending. Are people even listening, or are they dumb? It’s probably the latter, but it’s not their fault they’re dumb. There are well-oiled propaganda machines making fools of us all.

      • @Makeitstop@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        Also, I think Trump benefits from the assumptions that low information voters have about Republicans, and their tendency to blame the incumbent party for anything bad that happens, particularly in the economy. Harris laying out specific policies to help families, small businesses etc. is just in one ear and out the other, but Trump being vaguely pro-business in any way reinforces their biases.

        And to make matters worse, most people aren’t all that rational. They aren’t paying close attention to what’s being said and analyzing it coldly and logically. Hell, they may not even be paying attention, and just check in every once in a while. This also benefits Trump because his strategy is to spew lies, false promises and emotionally charged rhetoric which is most effective on the uninformed and unthinking members of the audience.

        That said, there’s just always going to be 20% of the people who would say Trump was better in every way no matter what happened. Some of that is because they are treating every question as a proxy for Trump vs Harris/Democrats/Commies/Whatever, and part of this is because they are so far gone that they can only interpret the debate through a right wing lens that will uncritically accept whatever Trump says, and which rejects any good point Harris makes.

      • aramis87
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        72 months ago

        Plus the electoral college. Florida and Texas were becoming increasingly purple until the Republicans in charge of those states made them into alt-right hellholes.

    • @makyo@lemmy.world
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      112 months ago

      ‘Think of how stupid the average person is, and realize half of them are stupider than that.’.

  • @clgoh@lemmy.ca
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    372 months ago

    53% is hardly “crushing”.

    And the only key metric is the election result.

  • @njm1314@lemmy.world
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    302 months ago

    and 43 percent saying he would prioritize lowering the cost of household goods

    How is anyone still this naive?

    • @Jesusaurus@lemmy.world
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      132 months ago

      Seriously. Especially with the massive trade tarrifs he’s proposing… You think companies are just going to bend over and accept those extra expenses? No. They are just going to pass that expense onto the consumer as a cost of doing business.

    • @fine_sandy_bottom
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      122 months ago

      Yeah I found this phrase quite irksome too.

      Conservatives everywhere seem to get this “good economic manager” perception for free. It shits me. The tarries he’s talking about would be a terrible idea for everyone - especially lower class consumers.

  • @taiyang@lemmy.world
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    142 months ago

    People are extremely dumb, and I think it’s closer to third grade level that’s recommended. They’ve been gutting education since at least Reagan and this is the inevitable result.

    The strangest thing is, Harris isn’t even ambiguous in prioritizing reducing costs and helping small businesses with financial assistance. People just tuned out by then on the debate, that was closer to the half way point. When I lecture, I have to take breaks for discussion after 15 minutes because even well meaning people lose focus after that time. It’s actually well researched pedagogy, but a debate isn’t a lecture and there’s no way they thought about it (aside from maybe throwing to commercial, haha).

  • @Donjuanme@lemmy.world
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    72 months ago

    I’m glad it points out what people think Trump did well in, but how the fuck do people think Trump will lower the price of household commodities and rent when 2016-2020 (and it’s policies) are when all this shit kicked off?

  • Null User Object
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    32 months ago

    Well, one potential psychological flaw in her $50k small business tax credit is that it’s only for new small businesses to go towards startup costs.

    Existing small businesses that may be struggling can look at that and only see her making it easier for their future competition to get rolling. It’s a net negative for them.

    Just about the only people that are going to look at that tax credit and see how it benefits them are people that are already looking into starting a small business and the main thing holding them back is the startup costs. That’s probably not a lot of voters.

    • @ricecake@sh.itjust.works
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      52 months ago

      Most voters don’t have a business and never will.

      The value of a net new business is that it creates more jobs and economic activity.
      Most people benefit from more jobs to either work at or drive up labor demand.
      Per that school of economic thought, incentivizing a new business adds more activity to the market and more opportunity for people to find ways to innovate, provide value and become profitable.
      Giving money to an existing struggling business is subsidizing a businesses that’s already demonstrated that it’s not working.

      However, we’re both putting too much into it. The goal is to say $50k for small business, because people like a business friendly atmosphere.
      Trump gets credit for giving tax cuts to businesses for stock buyback, which only helps investors. The goal is to court people who want pro business policies without literal handouts to corporations.

      • Null User Object
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        22 months ago

        All true. My point is that if they’re polling current small business owners asking if she is business friendly, they might likely say no, because her plans aren’t directly friendly to their specific company.